Beekeeping

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Revision as of 23:03, 10 February 2017 by imported>Iatots (BEES)
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Bees are gentle, hard-working animals that help plants pollinate and produce sweet honey to survive the long cold winters.

Bees in space, on the other hand, are far more aggressive, but all the more useful: since there is no winter in space (as far as we know) all honey produced by bees can be harvested, making beekeeping really easy. They have also outgrown carrying pollen, a largely obsolete task given the small quarters and relatively strong air currents on space stations, and have since evolved to help plants in their fruition phase, granting boost to the potency of their products. They are a great addition to any hydroponic farm that can afford them.

The birds and the bees

To start keeping your bees, you will need to procure yourself a queen bee . They can be obtained from the special beekeper starter pack crate, available at Cargo for 1500 points. The crate contains:

  • The queen bee.
  • An Apiary for the bees to live in, as well as 3 honeycomb frames .
  • A beekeeper suit, which will protect one person from bee stings.
  • A flyswatter, a very robust tool against small, fast insects.

Additional suits can be ordered for 1000 points a pair. Additional apiaries can be built for 40 wooden planks each, and additional frames for 5 planks. Each apiary can carry maximum 3 frames. BEE careful: the Apiary from a crate will deploy as soon as the crate is opened. You will need to unwrench the bolts if you want to move it.

Once you have deployed your Apiary, pick up the queen bee and gently intruce her to her new home. Assuming some plants are around to sustain a hive, she will get right to work.

Sweet slave labour

the sugar mine
the sugar mine

Once your queen bee is at home producing the workforce and there is plenty of plants to procure nectar from, it's time to reap the benefits.

Examining an apiary will present you with information regarding the colony:

  • Resources: goes from 0 to 100, and reflects how much nectar the bees have currently stored.
  • Resources towards a cell: in percentage points, reflects how much of the needed nectar for honeycomb production has been harvested.
  • Resources towards a bee: in percentage points, reflects how much of the needed nectar for a new bee has been harvested. Always half of a honeycomb.
  • Total honeycombs: How many honeycombs are currently in the Apiary. If this line isn't present, there are none.

Bees are half as cheap for an hive to produce than a honeycomb, and though their production is based on chance, it is very likely for a hive to overproduce bees as long as they have room for more. The maximum number of bees a hive can support is half the maximum number of honeycombs. Since each honeycomb frame can support 10 honeycomb clusters, and each apiary can house 3 frames, the maximum number of bees is either 5, 10 or 15, and the maximum number of honeycombs is 10, 20 or 30.
For early honey production, it is advised to put just one frame in the apiary.

To harvest honey, simply remove a honeycomb frame. Each honeycomb cluster provides 5 units of honey once processed in a grinder.

Spawn more overlords

While a single apiary is plenty for the whole of hydroponics, should you ever wish for more hives it is not necessary to order them. The apiaries can be built from wood, and queens can be produced through the use of space royal jelly, honey (40) strenghtened with unstable mutagen (10). Inject a queen with this and it will split into two identical copies!
Furthermore, inject a queen with any other chemical and its future progeny will produce it in their venom glands! Healing bees! deadlier bees! The choice is yours.

The fruits of our labour

So, what CAN you do with honey?

Mead, a fermented drink from honey produced with universal enzymes. Good alcohol content.
Honeybun, a pastry.
Honey nut bar, a healthy snack made with oats, nut free.

Hm, that's pretty much it for now.